Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I, personally, was a kid who preferred walking/hiking to sports, but I want my children to have options.
Thats great you want that, but I don't think DC is going to build a brand new neighborhood school in W3 to accommodate that, when there are more pressing needs across the city, and Hardy is rapidly turning into a neighborhood school.
Look, it's a CITY, and its going to have middle schools that don't have room for outdoor organized athletics. If you can afford to live in W3, you can probably afford to move either to a suburb, or inzone to one of projected new EOTP middle schools that likely will have the athletic facilities you want.
Anonymous wrote:
I, personally, was a kid who preferred walking/hiking to sports, but I want my children to have options.
Anonymous wrote:It can, but some kids really like organized sports and I think they should have the chance to do them in school. It is quite a burden on parents to pay for travel teams and drive to far away practices (I know from experience!). Plus, how do you even get good enough for a travel team if you don't have the opportunity to play sports in school??
I, personally, was a kid who preferred walking/hiking to sports, but I want my children to have options. Deal has more options than Hardy -- not just in athletics. Hardy is kind of a specialized school -- just perfect for some, but not ideal for many others.
After yesterday, I am convinced that Hardy should continue as a specialty school and the city should build another middle school to compete with Deal in Ward 3 or Ward 2.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The people obsessed with the field just kill me. Hardy is a TINY school. It also has a tiny amount of land. Deal is a ginormas (and getting bigger by the year) school. It has more land. NEXT.
So then what do you do if your kid is I B for Hardy and is serious about outdoor sports?
You kindly explain to him the reasons why a tiny school within an historical district cannot have unlimited fields for him to play baseball. He will understand. If he does not, well , that's not an Hardy's failure.